Web of Science: 99 citations, Scopus: 101 citations, Google Scholar: citations,
A systematic review of the validated monogenic causes of human male infertility : 2020 update and a discussion of emerging gene-disease relationships
Houston, Brendan J. (School of BioSciences and Bio21 Institute. The University of Melbourne)
Riera-Escamilla, Antoni (Institut d'Investigació Biomèdica Sant Pau)
Wyrwoll, Margot J. (Institute of Reproductive Genetics. University of Münster)
Salas-Huetos, Albert (Department of Nutrition. Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. Harvard University)
Xavier, Miguel J. (Faculty of Medical Sciences. Biosciences Institute. Newcastle University)
Nagirnaja, Liina (Genetics of Male Infertility Initiative (GEMINI))
Friedrich, Corinna (Institute of Reproductive Genetics. University of Münster)
Conrad, Donald F. (International Male Infertility Genomics Consortium (IMIGC))
Aston, Kenneth I. (International Male Infertility Genomics Consortium (IMIGC))
Krausz, Csilla (University of Florence)
Tüttelmann, Frank (International Male Infertility Genomics Consortium (IMIGC))
O'bryan, Moira K. (International Male Infertility Genomics Consortium (IMIGC))
Veltman, Joris A. (International Male Infertility Genomics Consortium (IMIGC))
Oud, Manon S. (Department of Human Genetics. Donders Institute for Brain. Cognition and Behaviour. Radboudumc)
Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona

Date: 2022
Abstract: Background: Human male infertility has a notable genetic component, including well-established diagnoses such as Klinefelter syndrome, Y-chromosome microdeletions and monogenic causes. Approximately 4% of all infertile men are now diagnosed with a genetic cause, but a majority (60-70%) remain without a clear diagnosis and are classified as unexplained. This is likely in large part due to a delay in the field adopting next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies, and the absence of clear statements from field leaders as to what constitutes a validated cause of human male infertility (the current paper aims to address this). Fortunately, there has been a significant increase in the number of male infertility NGS studies. These have revealed a considerable number of novel gene-disease relationships (GDRs), which each require stringent assessment to validate the strength of genotype-phenotype associations. To definitively assess which of these GDRs are clinically relevant, the International Male Infertility Genomics Consortium (IMIGC) has identified the need for a systematic review and a comprehensive overview of known male infertility genes and an assessment of the evidence for reported GDRs. Objective and Rationale: In 2019, the first standardised clinical validity assessment of monogenic causes of male infertility was published. Here, we provide a comprehensive update of the subsequent 1. 5 years, employing the joint expertise of the IMIGC to systematically evaluate all available evidence (as of 1 July 2020) for monogenic causes of isolated or syndromic male infertility, endocrine disorders or reproductive system abnormalities affecting the male sex organs. In addition, we systematically assessed the evidence for all previously reported possible monogenic causes of male infertility, using a framework designed for a more appropriate clinical interpretation of disease genes. Search Methods: We performed a literature search according to the PRISMA guidelines up until 1 July 2020 for publications in English, using search terms related to 'male infertility' in combination with the word 'genetics' in PubMed. Next, the quality and the extent of all evidence supporting selected genes were assessed using an established and standardised scoring method. We assessed the experimental quality, patient phenotype assessment and functional evidence based on gene expression, mutant in-vitro cell and in-vivo animal model phenotypes. A final score was used to determine the clinical validity of each GDR, across the following five categories: no evidence, limited, moderate, strong or definitive. Variants were also reclassified according to the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics-Association for Molecular Pathology (ACMG-AMP) guidelines and were recorded in spreadsheets for each GDR, which are available at imigc. org. Outcomes: The primary outcome of this review was an overview of all known GDRs for monogenic causes of human male infertility and their clinical validity. We identified a total of 120 genes that were moderately, strongly or definitively linked to 104 infertility phenotypes. Wider Implications: Our systematic review curates all currently available evidence to reveal the strength of GDRs in male infertility. The existing guidelines for genetic testing in male infertility cases are based on studies published 25 years ago, and an update is far overdue. The identification of 104 high-probability 'human male infertility genes' is a 33% increase from the number identified in 2019. The insights generated in the current review will provide the impetus for an update of existing guidelines, will inform novel evidence-based genetic testing strategies used in clinics, and will identify gaps in our knowledge of male infertility genetics. We discuss the relevant international guidelines regarding research related to gene discovery and provide specific recommendations to the field of male infertility. Based on our findings, the IMIGC consortium recommend several updates to the genetic testing standards currently employed in the field of human male infertility, most important being the adoption of exome sequencing, or at least sequencing of the genes validated in this study, and expanding the patient groups for which genetic testing is recommended.
Grants: Instituto de Salud Carlos III PI17/01822
Instituto de Salud Carlos III PI20/01562
Note: Altres ajuts: National Health and Medical Research Council (APP1120356); Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (918-15-667); Wellcome Trust (209451); German Research Foundation (DFG, CRU326); National Institutes of Health: Genomics of Spermatogenic Impairment (R01HD078641); Ministerio de Sanidad.
Rights: Aquest document està subjecte a una llicència d'ús Creative Commons. Es permet la reproducció total o parcial, la distribució, la comunicació pública de l'obra i la creació d'obres derivades, fins i tot amb finalitats comercials, sempre i quan es reconegui l'autoria de l'obra original. Creative Commons
Language: Anglès
Document: Article de revisió ; recerca ; Versió publicada
Subject: Genetics ; Male infertility ; Clinical validity ; Gene panel ; Gene-disease relationship ; Next-generation sequencing ; Spermatogenic failure ; Multiple morphological abnormalities of the sperm flagella ; Systematic review
Published in: Human Reproduction Update, Vol. 28 Núm. 1 (january 2022) , p. 15-29, ISSN 1460-2369

DOI: 10.1093/humupd/dmab030
PMID: 34498060


15 p, 1.2 MB

The record appears in these collections:
Research literature > UAB research groups literature > Research Centres and Groups (research output) > Health sciences and biosciences > Institut de Recerca Sant Pau
Articles > Research articles
Articles > Published articles

 Record created 2023-09-12, last modified 2023-10-17



   Favorit i Compartir